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Half-Life and Radioactivity
(7.2 and 7.3)
By Kira Nishi-Beckingham
What is Half-Life?
 A half-life is the amount of time it takes for half the
nuclei in a sample to decay.
 A half-life is constant for any radioactive isotope (
isotope - an atom of the same element with a
different number of neutrons)
Number of Half Lives Percentage Decayed Percentage Left
0 0% 100%
1 50% 50%
2 75% 25%
3 87.5% 12.5%
4 93.75% 6.25%
Video!
 http://youtu.be/tzM6aK5QbSU
Decay Curve
 A decay curve is a curved line on a graph that shows
the rate of decay of a radioisotope (an isotope that is
radioactive)
 It will look the same no matter what radioisotope you
graph, the only difference will be the length of the
half-life
Common Isotope Pairs and Dating
 There are many pairs of isotopes that can be used for
dating fossils
 The parent isotope is the one undergoing radioactive
decay and the daughter isotope is the result or
product of the radioactive decay.
Dating Fossils
 Historians and scientists use radioactive isotopes to date
fossils
 The most commonly known is Carbon-14
 Every living thing contains Carbon-14, but when they die
it starts to decay into Nitrogen-14. To be able to tell when
the plant or animal died, you just have to compare the
amount of Carbon-14 to the amount of Nitrogen-14
 Lets say a sample contained 20g of Carbon-14 and 20g of
Nitrogen-14. This means that one half-life has occurred
(5730 years).
 If there is more of the parent isotope then less than one
half-life has occurred and if there is more of the daughter
isotope then more than one half-life has occurred.
Another Video
 http://youtu.be/phZeE7Att_s
Quiz #1
Answer the following questions correctly or Radioactive
Man will take over the world!
1. Define the following
 Half-Life
 Isotope
 Decay Curve
 Parent Isotope
 Daughter Isotope
2. What is the daughter isotope of Carbon-14?
3. a) If there is more of the parent isotope this means..
b) If there is more of the daughter isotope?
c) If there is the same amount of the parent and daughter
isotopes?
Nuclear Fission
 Nuclear fission is the splitting of a heavy atom into
two smaller ones, subatomic particles, and energy
 Nuclear fission is accompanied by a huge release of
energy. We use this energy to generate power in
nuclear reactors
 While nuclear reactors reduce the amount of burning
fossil fuels, they produce dangerous waste that needs
to be stored for hundreds of thousands of years, the
physical deterioration is a large problem, and the
concern that the nuclear material could be used to
make dangerous weapons
Chemical Reaction Vs. Nuclear Reaction
 Chemical reactions involve electrons and change the
way atoms are arranged
 Nuclear reactions change the atom’s nucleus
 In nuclear reactions, a small change creates a large
amount of energy.
 Natural nuclear reactions are Alpha, Beta, and
Gamma decay
 Non-Natural nuclear reactions are called induced
nuclear reactions. These occur when scientists
bombard a nucleus with an alpha particle, beta
particle, or gamma rays
Rules and Symbols
 The rules for writing nuclear equations are:
1. The sum of the mass numbers on each side of the
equation stays the same
2. The sum of the charges on each side of the equation
stays the same
 This table shows the
symbols for each
subatomic particle
Chain Reaction
 When Uranium-235 is bombarded with a neutron, it
absorbs it making it Uranium-236 which is highly
unstable causing it to split immediately.
 When it splits, it also releases energy and more
neutrons
 This is important because if there is more atoms of
Uranium-235 around, these neutrons hit the atoms
causing them to split and release more neutrons
which hit more atoms and so on
 This is called a chain reaction
Video
 http://youtu.be/0v8i4v1mieU
Another Video
 http://youtu.be/1U6Nzcv9Vws
Nuclear Fusion
 Nuclear fusion is when two smaller, light weight
atoms fuse together to create one large one.
 This happens at the core of our sun and other stars
where there is enough heat and pressure to force the
atoms together
 This creates a large amount of energy that eventually
brings light and heat to us
 Scientists have been searching for ways to use
nuclear fusion to create energy however it is
extremely difficult to reach the temperature and
amount of pressure needed as well as finding a way
to contain the heat and pressure
Quiz #2
Answer the following questions correctly or
Radioactive Man will take over the world!
1. Define the following
 Nuclear Fission
 Nuclear Fusion
 Nuclear Reaction
 Chain Reaction
2. What are the rules for writing a Nuclear Equation?
3. What is the name of an isotope that can create a
chain reaction?
4. Where does nuclear fusion occur naturally?
Sources
 http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3084/3158429/blb2101.
html
 http://wwwchem.csustan.edu/chem3070/3070m04.htm
 http://www2.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/biobook
paleo1.html
 http://ohhs.ohsd.net/~brick/ear/eara_measuring_geotime_es3b.htm
 http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/earth/geology/car
bon-141.htm
 http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3084/3158429/blb2101.
html
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U6Nzcv9Vws
 http://www2.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/biobook
paleo1.html
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0v8i4v1mieU
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phZeE7Att_s
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzM6aK5QbSU
 http://marvel.com/universe/Radioactive_Man_%28Chen_Lu%29
Answers to Quiz #1
1. Half-Life – the amount of time it takes for half of a
sample of radioactive nuclei to decay
Isotope – an atom of the same element with a different
number of neutrons
Decay Curve – a curved line on a graph that shows the
decay rate of a radioisotope
Parent Isotope – The isotope that is undergoing the
radioactive decay
Daughter Isotope – The isotope that is the stable product of
the radioactive decay
2. Nitrogen- 14
3. a) Less than one half-life has occurred
b) More than one half-life has occurred
c) Exactly one half-life has occurred
Answers to Quiz #2
1. Nuclear Fission – One heavy and large atom splits into two
smaller ones releasing a large amount of energy
Nuclear Fusion – Two small, light weight atoms fuse together to
create one large one releasing a large amount of energy
Nuclear Reaction – When the nucleus of an atom is changed
Chain Reaction – One thing that causes another thing that causes
another thing and so on
2. The sum of the mass numbers on each side of the equation
stays the same
The sum of the charges on each side of the equation stays the
same
3. Uranium-235
4. The sun

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Half life and radioactivity

  • 1. Half-Life and Radioactivity (7.2 and 7.3) By Kira Nishi-Beckingham
  • 2. What is Half-Life?  A half-life is the amount of time it takes for half the nuclei in a sample to decay.  A half-life is constant for any radioactive isotope ( isotope - an atom of the same element with a different number of neutrons) Number of Half Lives Percentage Decayed Percentage Left 0 0% 100% 1 50% 50% 2 75% 25% 3 87.5% 12.5% 4 93.75% 6.25%
  • 4. Decay Curve  A decay curve is a curved line on a graph that shows the rate of decay of a radioisotope (an isotope that is radioactive)  It will look the same no matter what radioisotope you graph, the only difference will be the length of the half-life
  • 5. Common Isotope Pairs and Dating  There are many pairs of isotopes that can be used for dating fossils  The parent isotope is the one undergoing radioactive decay and the daughter isotope is the result or product of the radioactive decay.
  • 6. Dating Fossils  Historians and scientists use radioactive isotopes to date fossils  The most commonly known is Carbon-14  Every living thing contains Carbon-14, but when they die it starts to decay into Nitrogen-14. To be able to tell when the plant or animal died, you just have to compare the amount of Carbon-14 to the amount of Nitrogen-14  Lets say a sample contained 20g of Carbon-14 and 20g of Nitrogen-14. This means that one half-life has occurred (5730 years).  If there is more of the parent isotope then less than one half-life has occurred and if there is more of the daughter isotope then more than one half-life has occurred.
  • 8. Quiz #1 Answer the following questions correctly or Radioactive Man will take over the world! 1. Define the following  Half-Life  Isotope  Decay Curve  Parent Isotope  Daughter Isotope 2. What is the daughter isotope of Carbon-14? 3. a) If there is more of the parent isotope this means.. b) If there is more of the daughter isotope? c) If there is the same amount of the parent and daughter isotopes?
  • 9. Nuclear Fission  Nuclear fission is the splitting of a heavy atom into two smaller ones, subatomic particles, and energy  Nuclear fission is accompanied by a huge release of energy. We use this energy to generate power in nuclear reactors  While nuclear reactors reduce the amount of burning fossil fuels, they produce dangerous waste that needs to be stored for hundreds of thousands of years, the physical deterioration is a large problem, and the concern that the nuclear material could be used to make dangerous weapons
  • 10. Chemical Reaction Vs. Nuclear Reaction  Chemical reactions involve electrons and change the way atoms are arranged  Nuclear reactions change the atom’s nucleus  In nuclear reactions, a small change creates a large amount of energy.  Natural nuclear reactions are Alpha, Beta, and Gamma decay  Non-Natural nuclear reactions are called induced nuclear reactions. These occur when scientists bombard a nucleus with an alpha particle, beta particle, or gamma rays
  • 11. Rules and Symbols  The rules for writing nuclear equations are: 1. The sum of the mass numbers on each side of the equation stays the same 2. The sum of the charges on each side of the equation stays the same  This table shows the symbols for each subatomic particle
  • 12. Chain Reaction  When Uranium-235 is bombarded with a neutron, it absorbs it making it Uranium-236 which is highly unstable causing it to split immediately.  When it splits, it also releases energy and more neutrons  This is important because if there is more atoms of Uranium-235 around, these neutrons hit the atoms causing them to split and release more neutrons which hit more atoms and so on  This is called a chain reaction
  • 15. Nuclear Fusion  Nuclear fusion is when two smaller, light weight atoms fuse together to create one large one.  This happens at the core of our sun and other stars where there is enough heat and pressure to force the atoms together  This creates a large amount of energy that eventually brings light and heat to us  Scientists have been searching for ways to use nuclear fusion to create energy however it is extremely difficult to reach the temperature and amount of pressure needed as well as finding a way to contain the heat and pressure
  • 16. Quiz #2 Answer the following questions correctly or Radioactive Man will take over the world! 1. Define the following  Nuclear Fission  Nuclear Fusion  Nuclear Reaction  Chain Reaction 2. What are the rules for writing a Nuclear Equation? 3. What is the name of an isotope that can create a chain reaction? 4. Where does nuclear fusion occur naturally?
  • 17. Sources  http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3084/3158429/blb2101. html  http://wwwchem.csustan.edu/chem3070/3070m04.htm  http://www2.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/biobook paleo1.html  http://ohhs.ohsd.net/~brick/ear/eara_measuring_geotime_es3b.htm  http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/earth/geology/car bon-141.htm  http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/3084/3158429/blb2101. html  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U6Nzcv9Vws  http://www2.estrellamountain.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/biobook paleo1.html  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0v8i4v1mieU  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phZeE7Att_s  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzM6aK5QbSU  http://marvel.com/universe/Radioactive_Man_%28Chen_Lu%29
  • 18. Answers to Quiz #1 1. Half-Life – the amount of time it takes for half of a sample of radioactive nuclei to decay Isotope – an atom of the same element with a different number of neutrons Decay Curve – a curved line on a graph that shows the decay rate of a radioisotope Parent Isotope – The isotope that is undergoing the radioactive decay Daughter Isotope – The isotope that is the stable product of the radioactive decay 2. Nitrogen- 14 3. a) Less than one half-life has occurred b) More than one half-life has occurred c) Exactly one half-life has occurred
  • 19. Answers to Quiz #2 1. Nuclear Fission – One heavy and large atom splits into two smaller ones releasing a large amount of energy Nuclear Fusion – Two small, light weight atoms fuse together to create one large one releasing a large amount of energy Nuclear Reaction – When the nucleus of an atom is changed Chain Reaction – One thing that causes another thing that causes another thing and so on 2. The sum of the mass numbers on each side of the equation stays the same The sum of the charges on each side of the equation stays the same 3. Uranium-235 4. The sun